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Featured researches published by L Joseph.


International Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 2014

Chronic disease self-management and exercise in COPD as pulmonary rehabilitation: a randomized controlled trial.

Hl Cameron-Tucker; R Wood-Baker; C Owen; L Joseph; Eh Walters

Purpose Both exercise and self-management are advocated in pulmonary rehabilitation for people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The widely used 6-week, group-based Chronic Disease Self-Management Program (CDSMP) increases self-reported exercise, despite supervised exercise not being a program component. This has been little explored in COPD. Whether adding supervised exercise to the CDSMP would add benefit is unknown. We investigated the CDSMP in COPD, with and without a formal supervised exercise component, to address this question. Patients and methods Adult outpatients with COPD were randomized to the CDSMP with or without one hour of weekly supervised exercise over 6 weeks. The primary outcome measure was 6-minute walk test distance (6MWD). Secondary outcomes included self-reported exercise, exercise stage of change, exercise self-efficacy, breathlessness, quality of life, and self-management behaviors. Within- and between-group differences were analyzed on an intention-to-treat basis. Results Of 84 subjects recruited, 15 withdrew. 6MWD increased similarly in both groups: CDSMP-plus-exercise (intervention group) by 18.6±46.2 m; CDSMP-alone (control group) by 20.0±46.2 m. There was no significant difference for any secondary outcome. Conclusion The CDSMP produced à small statistically significant increase in 6MWD. The addition of a single supervised exercise session did not further increase exercise capacity. Our findings confirm the efficacy of a behaviorally based intervention in COPD, but this would seem to be less than expected from conventional exercise-based pulmonary rehabilitation, raising the question of how, if at all, the small gains observed in this study may be augmented.


International Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease | 2016

A randomized controlled trial of telephone-mentoring with home-based walking preceding rehabilitation in COPD

Hl Cameron-Tucker; R Wood-Baker; L Joseph; Julia Walters; Natalie Schüz; E. Haydn Walters

Purpose With the limited reach of pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) and low levels of daily physical activity in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), a need exists to increase daily exercise. This study evaluated telephone health-mentoring targeting home-based walking (tele-rehab) compared to usual waiting time (usual care) followed by group PR. Patients and methods People with COPD were randomized to tele-rehab (intervention) or usual care (controls). Tele-rehab delivered by trained nurse health-mentors supported participants’ home-based walking over 8–12 weeks. PR, delivered to both groups simultaneously, included 8 weeks of once-weekly education and self-management skills, with separate supervised exercise. Data were collected at three time-points: baseline (TP1), before (TP2), and after (TP3) PR. The primary outcome was change in physical capacity measured by 6-minute walk distance (6MWD) with two tests performed at each time-point. Secondary outcomes included changes in self-reported home-based walking, health-related quality of life, and health behaviors. Results Of 65 recruits, 25 withdrew before completing PR. Forty attended a median of 6 (4) education sessions. Seventeen attended supervised exercise (5±2 sessions). Between TP1 and TP2, there was a statistically significant increase in the median 6MWD of 12 (39.1) m in controls, but no change in the tele-rehab group. There were no significant changes in 6MWD between other time-points or groups, or significant change in any secondary outcomes. Participants attending supervised exercise showed a nonsignificant improvement in 6MWD, 12.3 (71) m, while others showed no change, 0 (33) m. The mean 6MWD was significantly greater, but not clinically meaningful, for the second test compared to the first at all time-points. Conclusion Telephone-mentoring for home-based walking demonstrated no benefit to exercise capacity. Two 6-minute walking tests at each time-point may not be necessary. Supervised exercise seems essential in PR. The challenge of incorporating exercise into daily life in COPD is substantial.


Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand Scientific Meeting | 2011

Telephone Health-Mentoring, a walking action plan and rehabilitation

Hl Cameron-Tucker; L Joseph; B Edwards; R Wood-Baker


European Respiratory Society Congress | 2009

A randomised controlled trial of supervised exercise with the chronic disease self-management program (CDSMP) for COPD

Hl Cameron-Tucker; L Joseph; C Owen; R Wood-Baker


Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand Scientific Meeting | 2009

A Clinical Trial of Supervised Exercise with the Chronic Disease Self-Management Programme (CDSMP) for COPD

Hl Cameron-Tucker; R Wood-Baker; C Owen; L Joseph


Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand Scientific Meeting | 2009

A Study of Supervised Exercise with the Chronic Disease Self-Management Programme (CDSMP): Qualitative Findings

Hl Cameron-Tucker; L Joseph; R Wood-Baker; C Owen


Archive | 2009

Outcomes of Health-Mentor Training to improve Self-Management by People with Cystic Fibrosis (CF)

Hl Cameron-Tucker; L Joseph; Elizabeth Cummings; Dw Reid; Claire Wainwright


European Respiratory Society Congress | 2009

A study of supervised exercise with the chronic disease self-management program (CDSMP) for COPD: Qualitative findings

Hl Cameron-Tucker; L Joseph; R Wood-Baker; C Owen


Thoracic Society of Australia and New Zealand Scientific Meeting | 2007

Reasons for Non-attendance at Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation programmes

Hl Cameron-Tucker; R Wood-Baker; L Joseph


Annual Scientific meeting of the Thoracic Society of Australia & New Zealand | 1999

The effect of a chronic obstructive pulmonary disease unit on hospital admissions

L Joseph; E Pilgrim; R Wood-Baker

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C Owen

University of Tasmania

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Dw Reid

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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Eh Walters

University of Tasmania

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